Nomura's Joseph Mezrich must be out of his fuck'in skull. The only reason the DOW is at 10,000 instead of 2,500
is the US government and the bankers buying stock without rhyme or reason. The stock market will double dip but
the economy won't because it never recovered in the first place and will probably will take another 15 years for
any recovery to take place. The increase in company profits is a combination of lies and a depreciated US dollar.
The consumer is dead and buried and will be for at least the next decade.
Monitor wrote:
> Nomura Research sees stock market rally continuing as profits recover
> Nov 6th 2009 - dailyfinance.com
> http://www.dailyfinance.com/2009/11/06/nomuras-joseph-mezrich-sees-th...
> Nomura's Joseph Mezrich sees market rally continuing as profits
> recover
> Bears who warn the U.S. stock market has gone too far too fast -- the
> broad Standard & Poor's 500 index is up 18 percent year to date -- may
> not get much vindication anytime soon. Investors should see stocks
> continue to rally as long as corporate profits keep recovering, says
> market expert Joseph Mezrich (pictured), Nomura Securities
> International's head of quantitative research.
> And the signs look good. The estimated earnings growth rate for the
> Standard & Poor's 500 during the fourth quarter is 216 percent,
> according to Thomson Reuters. Even stripping out the volatile
> financial sector, the other eight out of nine sectors are expected to
> show a blended growth rate of 7 percent. But that's still double the
> 3.5 percent economic growth of the U.S. economy in the third quarter.
> And Mezrich says it's the fact that profit growth is outpacing the
> U.S. economy that stocks have rallied ahead of an economic recovery.
> "Earnings are growing far, far faster than the economy," says Mezrich,
> speaking to reporters at the Nomura offices in New York on Thursday.
> "You saw it in 2002, you saw it in 1991 and you're probably seeing
> that now." Earnings growth typically follows an economic recession.
> And the current situation sure supports that recent trend.
> Seeing stocks recover losses is what's being being experience by major
> investors, who are betting that the economic recovery taking shape in
> the U.S. will be much stronger than is widely believed, DailyFinance's
> Vishesh Kumar wrote Thursday. The growing bullishness among major
> investors follows a wave of optimistic economic data that suggests
> prior views of a muted recovery might be far too gloomy.
> "Profits will grow faster than the economy," says Mezrich, who joined
> Nomura in 2006 and previously worked at UBS and Morgan Stanley. "The
> real question on how to gauge the performance of stocks is how profits
> will perform." Mezrich typically looks at systematic factors such as
> momentum, value and risk to explain market movements.
> The Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 53 percent, while the the S&P
> 500 is up 58 percent through the close of trading Thursday since the
> market hit its lows in March. "The March 9 rally was about risk coming
> out of the market," Mezrich says. "This has been extremely painful for
> many people. The market is coming back and likely will continue coming
> back."
> Investors should be enthused if they look back on the last recession
> and recovery in 2002 and 2003, he says. "It took about a year for that
> to turn around, but there was extraordinary profit growth."
> Profits were suppressed during the economic downturn, which is similar
> to what has gone on in the U.S. economy in the past 18 months. "This
> is a positive backdrop for when profits matter," Mezrich says. "We're
> maybe not yet there yet, because it's still all about risk."
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